Todd Fahnestock is the bestselling author of “The Wishing World,” “Fairmist,” and “Wildmane.” A true Gen Xer, Todd navigated his parentsโ divorce and subsequent poverty when he was 14, leaping into a series of adventures that would shape him into a writer. When heโs not writing, he teaches Taekwondo, goes on morning runs with his daughter, wrestles with his son, and plays board games with his wife.
SunLit: In the first chapter of your book, you talk about wanting to find the magic in your life. Was your decision to hike the Colorado Trail with your teenage son done with that in mind, or did you figure out the connection later?
Todd Fahnestock: The connection only came later. Oftentimes Iโll do things because my intuition nudges me that direction, and that was the case with The Colorado Trail. Iโd been wanting to do something physically challenging for a while, and this fit the bill. Also, the timing was perfect.
I knew I wouldnโt have many more opportunities to embark on this kind of a journey with my teenage son. As I mentioned in the book, I was feeling the time slipping away. My moments of being able to be a father to him were numbered. I only had a few short years (months?) before he would be seeking wisdom outside the parental unit.
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After we finished the trail, it was only when I decided to write the book that I began to see the connections between Dashโs coming-of-age moments and my own when I was 14. Thatโs when the marrying-up of my original search for magic and the magic I found in abundance on The Colorado Trail became clear.
SunLit: When did you realize the hiking trip might actually be material ripe for a book? And were you reluctant to attempt something so personal thatโs so different from what youโve done, to great success, with sci-fi and fantasy?
Fahnestock: I had been wanting to write something autobiographical for years. I still do, in fact. I had many interesting adventures in my youth, and for almost two decades Iโd been searching for a way to bring it forward. Thatโs what my novel โSummer of the Fetch” was, I think. That story is about 25% autobiographical (and the rest pure fiction). โSummer of the Fetchโ eased me into the notion of writing about my life directly. I think it paved the way for โOrdinary Magic.โ
When Dash and I got off the trail, I had three or four story ideas already percolating in the back of my mind โ all of them fiction centered around hiking in the Colorado wilderness. But when I got back, my friend Mark and his wife took me to a congratulatory dinner for finishing the trail. Over margaritas and enchiladas, Mark listened to my ideas for the fiction books involving the trail, but he expressed a high interest in hearing the real story, so much so that he suggested I write a fiction book or twoโฆ after I wrote the real account.
So I did.
I started chronicling the entire journey, and the story just flowed out. I had taken quite a few notes along the way, and I used them to reconstruct the timeline of the events in the story.
SunLit: Tell us about creating this book and mapping out the narrative. I imagine you approached it differently from the way you might map out fiction โ but was it easier or more difficult?
Fahnestock: I didnโt map out anything. I jumped in and started writing the account. It was still so fresh that most of the events leapt to mind immediately.
Compared to writing fiction, it was easier in that I didnโt have to imagine everything. I didnโt have to brainstorm for outlandish and/or interesting situations to put the characters through. I already had those moments, and of course the characters were Dash and me.ย
The difficulty came when I attempted to construct an entertaining narrative, rather than just a series of journal entries. For that, I let my intuition lead just as it had led me to committing to The Colorado Trail in the first place.
I connected my 14-year-old moments with Dashโs. Thatโs how things like the Two Rabbits chapter came to be. Those reminiscences tied to and complemented Dashโs journey, which ended up creating the theme of the story.
SunLit: Tell us how the story took shape. Were the narrative elements all there before you started writing, or did your approach change as you worked through the story?
Fahnestock: As I said above, I wove my way through the actual events naturally, writing them down with the color and verve with which they were embedded in my memory, trying to evoke for the reader how it felt to be on that ridge as the sun went down, shading the foothills, the higher hills, and the mighty mountains in various purple hues. And then I matched up the meaning of what we experienced to the storytelling structure, smoothing it, adjusting it a little, peppering foreshadowing of what was to come.
SunLit: Did you keep your writing to yourself until you finished, or was your son an ongoing resource for you? Did you share what youโd written with family as you went along?
Fahnestock: Actually, I did go to Dash from time to time about certain details, to clarify them or to see if there was anything Iโd overlooked. You never know just how personal your own vision of the world is until you ask someone else to chime in about what they remember of a shared experience.
“Ordinary Magic”
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By and large, though, we agreed on the details. The one difference: I remember being pretty damned stoic about my blistered feet. I mean, they hurt a LOT. So my memory is that I mentioned them very little compared to how much they hurt. He remembers me complaining about them every five minutes. โDad, I finally had to tell you to stop talking about your feet!โ
As to sharing it with the family, I probably shared some with Lara (my wife) from time to time. Sheโs hugely supportive, but she is also super busy. She loved that I hiked the trail with Dash. She made some big sacrifices so we could do it, but I think she was less interested in the process of the writing of the book. Though she did read the end result and loved it.
To my knowledge, neither Dash nor Elo has read the book. Yeah. Itโs interesting when youโve lived with people for a long time and youโre an artist. Nothing about the process is new to them, and probably even less is fascinating. My brother has a great story about one of his teenage idols, the lead singer of Slayer โ a 1980s heavy metal band โ that sums it up nicely. And the story is encapsulated in one picture and one sentence.
The picture shows the lead singer giving the universal heavy metal sign with one hand and roaring at the camera. Next to him stands his family, including his teenage daughter, who is looking at him with an expression that says, โOh no. Dad, could you please just not…โ
The caption was something like: You could be the lead singer for Slayer, and your teenage daughter will still think youโre lame.
The point I take away is what seems interesting to people outside looks normal (and sometimes boring) to the people on the inside.
SunLit: Even though you obviously lived the experience, were there revelations once you started thinking about your adventure in different, more literary, terms?
Fahnestock: Absolutely. I processed the trip for a long time after it ended. Iโm still processing it. There are moments I point to and draw wisdom from in my everyday life. In fact, I think my son is sick of hearing me say, โHey, this is just like that one time on the trail whenโฆโ
One thing that keeps coming up is โI canโt believe I actually did that.โ I mean, I was there. I walked every (often painful) step. And walking it one step at a time seemed, most times, extremely possible. But looking at it from a distance, Iโm still amazed that it all came together, from my 50-year-old body holding up and improving over the distance to Dashโs mental attitude holding out for that long. I mean, he was 14 at the time. When I was 14, going on a one-week trip was a monumental accomplishment, let alone five weeks in a row.
Literarily, I often think about the subtle wisdoms that crept into our lives when everything was so simple. As I mentioned in the book, Dash and I only had to pay attention to seven things while we were on the trail: water, food, footing near cliffs, the weather, wild animals, adequate clothing, and shelter at night. Of course, six of those can kill you if you don’t pay attention. So there is that.
But in the urban world, Iโll often be thinking about 82 things at any given time, and none of them (with the exception of driving on I-25) will kill you.
When life is simple, some things become clearer. Like what is most important. When all you have to do in a day is walk and look at nature, you can consider a multitude of things in the calm quiet. Itโs easier to slip into a philosophical frame of mind, and I found myself trying to put together wisdoms to take home with me, like remembering that our lives are all so transient. Like reminding myself to appreciate every sunset, because not one of them is going to be like the last.
SunLit: Was your process for writing this book much different than your routine for writing your other books?
Fahnestock: Actually it was. The only other book Iโd written that was even remotely autobiographical was โSummer of the Fetch,โ and as I mentioned that was only 25% true to life. โOrdinary Magicโ was 100% true to life, so writing down the words was pretty easy. I knew all the scenes and they were only a couple months in the rearview mirror when I started the book. Usually when I write fiction, Iโm trying to seek interesting situations for my characters and invent original details to draw the reader in. This time, I didnโt have to make anything up, I just had to present it in an interesting fashion.
I reminisced and drew details from my memory rather than from my imagination. So in that respect, it was quite different. I was really more a director than a writer, picking and choosing which โscenesโ to spread out and which ones to roll up and tuck back into my satchel of scrolls. The theme of teenage awakening (as well as a good bit of midlife awakening) just naturally floated to the surface, and I went with it. I wonโt say it was the easiest book I ever wrote, but it was close. In the top 3.
SunLit: How did you feel when youโd typed the last sentence? Was it a different feeling completing a work so personal than finishing a work of fiction?
Fahnestock: I felt emotional. Remember that I was tired, footsore, and longing to sleep in a bed and eat a cheeseburger when we reached the end of that trail, but in those last two miles when I should have just been stumbling forward in a blind desperation to get to civilization, I slowed down. I spent moments looking at that river, barely recalling some half-remembered moment when Iโd been there in high school or junior high.
And of course, when I wrote the story after, I wasnโt footsore or tired or longing for civilization. I was sitting comfortably in my chair sipping on a gin โnโ tonic and reminiscing. So my feels were, if anything, even more potent. I really sank into them, floating in the revelation that Iโd lived a whole life since I was that 14 year old living in Durango, that I really had come full circle when I returned to those same stomping grounds and found themโฆ different. Because I was different. It was a powerful moment then and it still is.
To answer the second question here, yes it was a different feeling completing a work that was autobiographical. I wonโt say โmore personalโ because all of my books are very personal to me. But I will say that, at certain parts in the narrative, I felt horribly exposed. I went round and round about the rabbit story. Iโve felt horrible about that since I was a kid and I was scared that readers would hate me for revealing what Iโd done. I mean, I think it shaped my personality in a positive way, but I felt horrible guilt for it. I still do.
I was also reluctant to talk about the โrunning from the lightningโ episode. I mean, everything I did on the trail reflected on me as a father, and I kept thinking, โWhat are people going to think? I mean, what kind of father puts his son in danger like that?โ
In the end, though, thatโs the danger of being a writer. I feel like if I donโt strive to put personal aspects into every story, fiction and nonfiction alike, Iโm settling for less, arenโt I? A more sterile version.
Anyway, thatโs what compelled me to pull no punches. But yes, it was a different feeling. Riskier.
SunLit: Tell us about your next project.
Fahnestock: Oh my goodness. I have four. I want to keep working on โTower of the Four.โ I have six episodes, but the story is barely half over.
I just republished โThe Wishing Worldโ and โThe Wishing World: Loremaster.โ I have the third book in the series, โThe Wishing World: Spheres of Magicโ roughed out, and I just need to go through it and finalize it.
Also, over the last two years, Iโve been working like a madman on the multi-author, shared-world, mega-epic fantasy experience โEldros Legacy.โ Iโve written three volumes so far: โKhyven the Unkillable,โ โLorelle of the Darkโ and โRhenn the Traveler.โ The fourth installment, โSlayter and the Dragon,โ is already started, and Iโll probably get that done this year, too.
And, despite my insistence that โSummer of the Fetchโ is a one-off, an idea popped into my head three days ago about a possible sequel to that story. Not only that, butโฆ
โฆit might actually tie into my time-travel story, โCharlie Fiction,โ as well. That would be a tall order, and so Iโm not sure if this is just a half-baked idea doomed to failure or if itโs a winner. Iโll keep you posted.
